'Nearing a new chapter': China's offshore wind boom to spur internationalisation of OEMs
Turbine makers including Ming Yang and Dongfang could make rapid inroads into European plays, armed with 10MW-plus models, says head of World Forum Offshore Wind
China’s fast-approaching supremacy at the top of the global offshore wind capacity table is set to spin off a “second narrative” as the Asian superpower’s domestic turbine makers begin to commercially colonise international markets for the first time, going head-to-head with western OEMs, according to the managing director of industry advocacy body World Forum Offshore Wind (WFO).
“Ming Yang has suddenly become a very active first mover here – no this isn’t a massive project but it is a foothold, a foot in the door. Now the only question is what will come next for them in the way of a large-scale project, because this will intensify competition with the Big Three [Siemens Gamesa, GE and Vestas].”
To date, however, China’s ultra-large turbines have all been sold into domestic projects while the European northern seas market has been split three-ways between Siemens Gamesa, GE and MHI Vestas.
“Seeing yet another record year of global offshore wind installation underlines the dynamic global momentum for offshore wind,” said Herzig.
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Fifteen new offshore wind farms came online over the year, including off the UK – which remains the world’s biggest play with 10.4GW installed, as well as China, Germany, Portugal, Belgium, the Netherlands and the US, taking the worldwide tally to 162.